When news broke that Special Counsel Robert Muellerâs investigation âdid not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities,â Russian officials and the state media reacted with fiendish delight.
Senator Alexei Pushkov, a senior deputy in Russiaâs upper-house Federation Council, described the Mueller report as âa mountain that birthed a dead mouse.â Citing Fox News, Russian state news agency TASS reported that the findings represent a complete victory for President Trump. âItâs not every day you get to see [Rachel Maddow] nearly cry live on-air,â rejoiced Russian state media outlet RIA Novosti.
Evgeny Popov, the host of 60 Minutes, the most popular TV program in Russia as of 2018, interpreted Muellerâs findings as a confirmation that âRussia didnât elect Trump,â but âwill most definitely elect him in 2020.â Russiaâs Federal News Agency (RIA FAN), an offshoot of the notorious Russian troll factory known as the Internet Research Agency (IRA), described Muellerâs inquiry as an investigation âagainst Russia and Trump.â
RIA FAN disingenuously alleged that Mueller never demonstrated any evidence of the Russian trollsâ involvement in Trumpâs election. âThe Russians are comingâor the Russians were never there?â mockingly asked the troll agencyâs surrogate, falsely claiming that the special counsel couldnât find either the troll factory or any trace of the Russian hackers. RIA FAN speculates the investigation that ended without an indictment or an impeachment represents a golden ticket for Trump, all but guaranteeing his re-election in 2020.
Russian state news outlet RIA Novosti predicts the Russian election interference will soon be replaced by âUkrainegate,â based on the conspiracy theory that Ukraine meddled in the U.S. elections on the side of Hillary Clinton. Trump recently tweeted the link to an article, widely promoted by the Russians, stating: âAs Russia Collusion fades, Ukrainian plot to help Clinton emerges.â
The same narrative of Ukrainianânot Russianâelection interference was promoted by Fox News host Sean Hannity in 2017. Right on cue, Trumpâs son Donald Trump Jr. jumped on the Ukraine bandwagon by tweeting an article that demanded the removal of former President Barack Obamaâs U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, and rehashing the claims of Ukraineâs alleged interference in the U.S. elections.
The Russian state media are hoping that President Trump, described by RIA Novosti as âa vengeful showman,â will initiate a brand new investigation of election interferenceâthis time, against Ukraine. The Kremlinâs scribes predict the grand finale of such an investigation would be perfectly timed to unfold immediately prior to the 2020 election.
While the Russians are notably elated about the outcome of the Mueller inquiry, they cautiously anticipate the outward worsening of the countryâs relations with the United States. Sergei Brilev, the host of a weekly state TV news program on the Rossiya-1 channel, concluded that nowâmore than everâTrump will go out of his way to prove he is no friend to Russia. The deployment of strategic U.S. Air Force B-52 bomber, conducting training flights with regional allies and NATO partners in the vicinity of the Baltic Sea, is being described by the Kremlinâs mouthpieces as a manifestation of Trumpâs desire to appear tough on Russia.
RTâs editor-in-chief, Margarita Simonyan, bitterly predicted the findings of Mueller would do nothing to alleviate the charges of Russian election interference. âItâs good that Mueller couldnât prove the collusionâthat is, good for Trump. It makes no difference for us. Now theyâll say, âThere was no collusion, but Russia still interfered, of its own treacherous initiative.â Just watch,â warned Simonyan.
While it seems the Kremlin might manage to snatch defeat from the jaws of its own info-victories, the Trump administration remains a gift that keeps on giving.
Trumpâs recent decision to recognize Israelâs sovereignty over the Golan Heights was interpreted by Russian officials as a tacit withdrawal of U.S. objections to the Russian annexation of Crimea. Konstantin Kosachev, head of the Russian Federation Councilâs Foreign Affairs Committee, concluded: âAfter Trumpâs Golan statement, any demagoguery about Crimea is groundless.â
The Kremlin also capitalized on the unrelenting focus on the Mueller investigation, which provided the ideal cover for a quiet arrival of two Russian Air Force planes in Venezuelaâs main airport on Saturday, transporting nearly 100 Russian troops to the country.
The first plane reportedly carried Vasily Tonkoshkurov, chief of staff of Russiaâs ground forces, and the second was a cargo plane carrying 35 tons of materiel. Russian state news agency Sputnik reported on the Spanish-language version of its website: âTwo Russian planes arrived in Venezuela on Saturday with equipment and personnel to fulfill technical military contracts.â
Putinâs geopolitical appetites are growing exponentially, and the political disarray in the United States continues to fuel the flame of the Kremlinâs bonfire.